123 FXUS63 KLSX 090924 AFDLSXArea Forecast Discussion...Updated Aviation National Weather Service Saint Louis MO 424 AM CDT Tue Sep 9 2025
.KEY MESSAGES...
- Temperatures will warm with seasonably hot temperatures forecast Friday through the weekend along with dry conditions.
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.SHORT TERM... (Through Late Wednesday Afternoon) Issued at 316 AM CDT Tue Sep 9 2025
A series of upper/mid-level shortwave troughs/MCVs will pass over the Mid-Mississippi River Valley today into Wednesday acting to slowly retract a surface anticyclone that continues to dominate the area. These features will also produce waves of upper/mid-level clouds, especially this morning, but weak low-level forcing and dry low levels limit the prospects of any associated precipitation reaching the ground in lieu of virga. A dry forecast is further supported by HREF probabilities of measurable rainfall less than 20 percent, although they some sprinkles cannot entirely be ruled out this evening and tonight. With retraction of the anticyclone, weak low-level WAA will ensue today as flow varies between southerly and westerly going forward. Therefore, high temperatures will warm into the upper 70s to low 80s F today, mid-80s to around 90 F on Wednesday with less clouds and warmer 850-hPa temperatures.
Pfahler
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.LONG TERM... (Wednesday Night through Monday) Issued at 316 AM CDT Tue Sep 9 2025
Model guidance is in agreement that an upper-level ridge will amplify into the Mid-Mississippi River Valley Thursday into Friday as the entire flow pattern across the CONUS amplifies and becomes configured into an Omega Block. This evolution will allow the weak low-level WAA and southerly flow to persist with 850-hPa temperatures beginning to climb above the 90th climatological percentile (around 20 C) by Friday through the weekend with NBM high temperature ranges relatively tightly clustered around 90 to the mid- 90s F across the CWA, well-above average for mid-September. Low- level moisture will be slower to increase with a lack of direct Gulf of Mexico moisture connection in this pattern, keeping heat index values from rising much above these temperatures but also deteriorating drought conditions with potential increases in evaporative demand with dry, hot days.
Sunday into early next week, global model guidance spread increases as there are mixed signals for a reorganization of the blocking pattern. A portion of global ensemble membership (approx 44 percent) has this process transpiring with a potent upper-level trough forced into the Great Lakes while the larger membership (approx 56 percent) has ridging of varying amplitude remaining overhead. The former scenario would allow a weak cold front to reach the region accompanied by a limited opportunity for precipitation and subsequent cooler but still above average temperatures next week. The latter scenario would equate to continued dry conditions and seasonably hot temperatures. Combining all scenarios, total ensemble model-derived 24-hour probabilities of measurable rainfall reach 40 to 50 percent around Monday, but probabilities for greater than 0.25" are less than 20 percent. The bottom line is that there is little, if any, support for any widespread rainfall.
Pfahler
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.AVIATION... (For the 12z TAFs through 12z Wednesday Morning) Issued at 423 AM CDT Tue Sep 9 2025
With upper-level clouds interrupting most river valley fog this morning, dry and VFR flight conditions are forecast through out the TAF period at all terminals. Winds will remain light and generally southerly or southeasterly.
Pfahler
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.LSX WATCHES/WARNINGS/ADVISORIES... MO...None. IL...None. &&
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WFO LSX
NWS LSX Office Area Forecast Discussion